A. The word is adjure. [uh-jooexternal image thinsp.pngr] -Kamila

B. The judge adjured the witness to tell the truth.
-Jennifer Y.

C. Adjure: to charge, bind, or command earnestly and solemnly, often under oath or the threat of a penalty.
http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/adjure
Meryam J.

D. external image compositingjudge.jpg http://www.larochecreative.com/compositingjudge.jpg -Kamila

F. A time when I adjured was when I requested to my parents the idea of going on the trip to Ohio for the school band. I knew it would benifit me in the end so I asked them earnestly if I could go.
-Blair S.

E. advance, apply, ask, beg, beseech, bid, call, call upon, claim, contest, crave, demand, entreat, hit on, implore, importune, petition, plead, pray, propose, proposition, question, refer, require, resort to, solicit, strike, submit, sue, supplicate, urge
Miro P. courtesy of thesaurus.com

G. The word ajure rreminds me of the movie "Legally Blonde." In this movie the judge would always adjure the witnesses to tell the truth so the case could be finally determined. Elle would always adjure the witness to also help get them to say something that she could use in her favor to win the case.
-Dan W.

H. I have the utmost sympathy with, and regard for, them; but I most earnestly adjure them solemnly to weigh their responsibilities and to see that when their new government is started it shall run smoothly, and with freedom from flagrant denial of right on the one hand, and from insurrectionary disturbances on the other.…

Adjure is used as seen here in the Monroe Doctrine. This is the end of President Wilson's speech, in which he is imploring the newly formed nation of Cuba to do what the US also sees as right for America has just deemed itself to be the protector of the Caribbean.
Joe T